Nature Structural and Molecular Biology, volume 14, issue 4, pages 318-324

Spontaneous reverse movement of mRNA-bound tRNA through the ribosome

Niels Fischer 2
Yuri P Semenkov 3
Holger Stark 2
Wolfgang Wintermeyer 4
Marina V. Rodnina 1
1
 
Institute of Physical Biochemistry, University of Witten/Herdecke, Witten, Germany
4
 
Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Witten/Herdecke, Witten, Germany
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2007-03-18
scimago Q1
SJR7.151
CiteScore22.0
Impact factor12.5
ISSN15459993, 15459985
PubMed ID:  17369838
Molecular Biology
Structural Biology
Abstract
During the translocation step of protein synthesis, a complex of two transfer RNAs bound to messenger RNA (tRNA–mRNA) moves through the ribosome. The reaction is promoted by an elongation factor, called EF-G in bacteria, which, powered by GTP hydrolysis, induces an open, unlocked conformation of the ribosome that allows for spontaneous tRNA–mRNA movement. Here we show that, in the absence of EF-G, there is spontaneous backward movement, or retrotranslocation, of two tRNAs bound to mRNA. Retrotranslocation is driven by the gain in affinity when a cognate E-site tRNA moves into the P site, which compensates the affinity loss accompanying the movement of peptidyl-tRNA from the P to the A site. These results lend support to the diffusion model of tRNA movement during translocation. In the cell, tRNA movement is biased in the forward direction by EF-G, which acts as a Brownian ratchet and prevents backward movement.

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